1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, 2004 1 CHAPTER 13: THE QUASI-STEADY APPROXIMATION.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
REVIEW OF 1D OPEN CHANNEL HYDRAULICS
Advertisements

Example: Uniform Flow at Known Q and y
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 29: KNICKPOINT MIGRATION.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 18: MOBILE AND STATIC ARMOR.
LECTURE 13 TURBIDITY CURRENTS AND HYDRAULIC JUMPS
Morphodynamic Equilibria in Tidal Embayments with Decreasing Cross-Section Henk Schuttelaars The Institute for Marine and Atmospheric research Utrecht.
1 MECH 221 FLUID MECHANICS (Fall 06/07) Tutorial 7.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 1: FELIX M. EXNER AND THE.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 9: RELATIONS FOR HYDRAULIC.
Pertemuan Open Channel 2. Bina Nusantara VARIED FLOW IN OPEN CHANNELS.
RELATIONS FOR THE CONSERVATION OF BED SEDIMENT
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 16: MORPHODYNAMICS OF BEDROCK-ALLUVIAL.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 17: AGGRADATION AND DEGRADATION.
Rivers entering a (subsiding) graben in eastern Taiwan.
Hydraulic Jump as an application of Momentum Equation
MECH 221 FLUID MECHANICS (Fall 06/07) Chapter 10: OPEN CHANNEL FLOWS
CHARACTER OF RIVER CHANNELS
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 21 RESPONSE OF A SAND-BED.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 12: BULK RELATIONS FOR TRANSPORT.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 24: APPROXIMATE FORMULATION.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 22: MORPHODYNAMICS OF RECIRCULATING.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 3: BANKFULL CHARACTERISTICS.
If there is no change in friction or slope as we move down stream
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 11: SAMPLE CALCULATION FOR.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 20 AGGRADATION AND DEGRADATION.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 15: EXTENSION OF 1D MODEL.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 19: EFFECT OF THE HYDROGRAPH.
Suspended Load Above certain critical shear stress conditions, sediment particles are maintained in suspension by the exchange of momentum from the fluid.
HYDRAULICS AND SEDIMENT TRANSPORT: RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS
Chapter 7 continued Open Channel Flow
CH 7 - Open Channel Flow Brays Bayou Concrete Channel Uniform & Steady
Hydraulic Routing in Rivers
Sediment transport in wadi systems
MORPHODYNAMICS OF RIVERS ENDING IN 1D DELTAS
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, HIGHLIGHTS OF OPEN CHANNEL HYDRAULICS.
Reynolds Number (Re) Re = R = A/P V = mean velocity  /  =  (which is kinematic viscosity) Re = VR(  /  ), where Driving Forces Resisting Force Re.
Intro to Geomorphology (Geos 450/550) Lecture 5: watershed analyses field trip #3 – Walnut Gulch watersheds estimating flood discharges.
MODELING OF FLUVIAL FANS AND BAJADAS IN SUBSIDING BASINS
Hydraulics for Hydrographers Basic Hydrodynamics
LECTURE 8 LAYER-AVERAGED GOVERNING EQUATIONS FOR TURBIDITY CURRENTS
Governing equations: Navier-Stokes equations, Two-dimensional shallow-water equations, Saint-Venant equations, compressible water hammer flow equations.
Sediment Yield and Channel Processes. Definitions Suspend Sediment – sediment (orgranic or inorganic) which remains in suspension in water for a considerable.
1 LECTURE 12 MORPHODYNAMICS OF 1D SUBMARINE/SUBLACUSTRINE FANS CEE 598, GEOL 593 TURBIDITY CURRENTS: MORPHODYNAMICS AND DEPOSITS As the Colorado River.
Flow Energy PE + KE = constant between any two points  PE (loss) =  KE (gain) Rivers are non-conservative; some energy is lost from the system and can.
Mass Transfer Coefficient
1 MECH 221 FLUID MECHANICS (Fall 06/07) Chapter 6: DIMENTIONAL ANALYSIS Instructor: Professor C. T. HSU.
MIKE 11 IntroductionNovember 2002Part 1 Introduction to MIKE 11 Part 1 General Hydrodynamics within MIKE 11 –Basic Equations –Flow Types Numerical Scheme.
Channel Routing Simulate the movement of water through a channel
Channel Routing Simulate the movement of water through a channel
SOME NOTES ON MORPHODYNAMIC MODELING OF VENICE LAGOON Gary Parker, Spring, 2004 Venice Lagoon was formed by the action of deposition of mud and sand from.
Overview of Open Channel Flow Definition: Any flow with a free surface at atmospheric pressure Driven entirely by gravity Cross-section can vary with location.
1 LECTURE 11 INTRODUCTION TO TURBIDITY CURRENT MORPHODYNAMICS CEE 598, GEOL 593 TURBIDITY CURRENTS: MORPHODYNAMICS AND DEPOSITS Top: photo showing the.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 31: EROSIONAL NARROWING.
1 INTRODUCTION TO “Stratigrafia” The code in the workbook “stratigrafia” computes - longitudinal profiles; - water surface elevation; - sediment transport.
Basic Hydrology & Hydraulics: DES 601 Module 16 Open Channel Flow - II.
7. Bedforms in coarse-grained channels Step-pool units Cluster bedforms Riffle-pool sequences.
Basic Review - continued tom.h.wilson Department of Geology and Geography West Virginia University Morgantown, WV.
Basic Hydraulics: Open Channel Flow – II
EXAMPLE Water flows uniformly in a 2m wide rectangular channel at a depth of 45cm. The channel slope is and n= Find the flow rate in cumecs.
Channel Routing Simulate the movement of water through a channel
Channel Routing Simulate the movement of water through a channel
Morphodynamic and Sediment Tracers in One-Dimension
THE SEARCH FOR THE HOLY GRAIL:
The morphodynamics of super- and transcritical flow
Fluid flow in an open channel
Modelling tools - MIKE11 Part1-Introduction
Discharge, stream flow & channel shape
Introduction/Open-Channel Flow
Instituto Superior Técnico instituto superior técnico
Presentation transcript:

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 13: THE QUASI-STEADY APPROXIMATION The conservation equations governing 1D morphodynamics can be summarized as For many applications in morphodynamics, however, it is possible to neglect the time derivatives in the first two equations, retaining it only in the Exner equation of conservation of bed sediment. That is, the flow over the bed can be approximated as quasi-steady. This result, first shown by de Vries (1965), is often implicitly used in morphodynamic calculations without justification. A demonstration follows. Conservation of flow mass Conservation of flow momentum Conservation bed sediment (sample form using total bed material load)

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, NON-DIMENSIONALIZATION USING A REFERENCE STATE The essence of morphodynamics is in the interaction between the flow and the bed. The flow changes the bed, which in turn changes the flow. Consider a reference mobile-bed equilibrium state with constant flow velocity U o flow depth H o, bed slope S o and total volume bed material transport rate per unit width q to. For the sake of simplicity the bed friction coefficient C f is assumed to be constant. The analysis easily generalizes, however, to the case of varying friction coefficient. The application of momentum balance to the equilibrium flow imposes the conditions where  u is the value of  at x = 0. In a problem of morphodynamic evolution, the flow and bed can be expected to deviate from this base state. In general, then, The following non-dimensionalizations are introduced:

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, NON-DIMENSIONALIZATION USING A CHARACTERISTIC HYDRAULIC TIME SCALE Note that the non-dimensionalization of time involves the “hydraulic” time scale H o /U o, which physically corresponds to the time required for the flow to move a distance equal to one depth in the downstream direction. Substituting the non- dimensional variables into the balance equations yields the results where

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, HOW LARGE IS  Bed porosity p is typically in the range 0.25 ~ 0.45 for beds of noncohesive sediment. The parameter thus scales the ratio of the volume transport of solids to the volume transport of water by a river. For the great majority of cases of interest this ratio is exceedingly small, even during floods. A case in point is the Minnesota River near Mankato, Minnesota, a medium-sized sand-bed stream. Some sample calculations follow. Minnesota River at the Wilmarth Power Plant just downstream of Mankato, Minnesota, USA. Flow is from left to right.

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, HOW LARGE IS  contd. Given below are 13 grain size distributions for the bed material of the Minnesota River at Mankato, along with an average of all 13. The fraction of sediment finer than microns in the bed is negligible; such material can be treated as wash load. From

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, HOW LARGE IS  contd. During the period the highest measured suspended load concentration was 2850 mg/liter, or C = 2850/2.65*1x10 -6 = ; the discharge Q was 340 m 3 /s, so the volume total suspended load (bed material load + wash load) Q sbw = m 3 /s. From

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, HOW LARGE IS  contd. At a discharge of 340 m 3 /s, about 79.5% of the suspended load is wash load, giving a suspended bed material load Q s of m 3 /s. Estimating the bedload Q b as about 15% of the total bed material load, an estimate for the highest value of Q t of m 3 /s is obtained. From

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, HOW LARGE IS  contd. Assuming a value of bed porosity p of 0.35, then, an estimate of the very high end of the value of  that might be attained by the Minnesota River near Mankato is The Minnesota River is by no means atypical of rivers. The largest values of  attained in the great majority of rivers is much less than unity. The exceptions include streams with slopes so high that the flows are transitional to debris flows, streams carrying lahars, or heavily sediment laden flow from regions recently covered with volcanic ash, and many streams in the Yellow River Basin of China.

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, NOT ALL FLOWS SATISFY THE CONDITION  << 1 Double-click on the image to see a debris flow in Japan. The volume (mass) of sediment carried by debris flows is of the same order of magnitude as the volume (mass) of water carried by such flows. The quasi-steady approximation breaks down for such flows. Video courtesy Paul Heller. rte-bookjapandebflow.mpg: to run without from relinking, download to same folder as PowerPoint presentations.

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, HYDRAULIC TIME SCALES Over short, or “hydraulic” times scales  t ~ H o /U o, then, when  << 1 the governing equations approximate to That is, the bed can be treated as unchanging for computations over “hydraulic” time scales, even though sediment is in motion. This is because the condition  << 1 implies lots of water flows through but very little sediment, so that the bed does not have time to change in response to the flow.

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, MORPHODYNAMIC TIME SCALES A dimensionless morphodynamic time t* can be defined as An order-one change  t* corresponds to a change in dimensioned time i.e. much longer than the characteristic “hydraulic” time. The governing equations thus become That is, when the time scales of interest are of “morphodynamic” scale, the flow can be treated as quasi-steady even though the bed is evolving, and thus changing the flow.

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, THE DIMENSIONED EQUATIONS WITH THE QUASI-STEADY APPROXIMATION According to the quasi-steady approximation, the bed changes so slowly compared to the characteristic response time of the flow that the flow can be approximated as responding immediately. The dimensioned equations thus reduce to the following forms: The quasi-steady approximation greatly simplifies morphodynamic calculations. There are, however, reasons not to use it. These include a)Cases of rapidly varying hydrographs, when it is desired to characterize the sediment transport over the entire hydrograph; b)Cases when one wishes to capture the effect of a flood wave (with a high water surface slope on the upstream side of the wave and a low water surface slope on the downstream side) on sediment transport; and c)Cases when the flow makes transitions between subcritical and supercritical flow, in which case a shock-capturing method capable of automatically locating hydraulic jumps is required.

1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, REFERENCES FOR CHAPTER 13 de Vries, M Considerations about non-steady bed-load transport in open channels. Proceedings, 11th Congress, International Association for Hydraulic Research, Leningrad: